Product OverviewGreat Airflow, Great Expandability, Hassle Free.CM 590 III - A new take on an old favouriteThe CM 590 III gives you the freedom to build a PC for any and all user needs. It can be a basic work PC for the office or a workhorse gaming rig with liquid cooling, full sized graphics cards, and multiple hard drives. Start out small and work your way up or fill this to the brim right out of the box. The CM 590 III is the hassle free solution to building the mid-tower of your dreams. FeaturesUpgrade and expandThe CM 590 III was created for PC builders who want to start out small, but still have room to enhance or improve their build in the future. This mid-tower case has room for full sized graphics cards, up to six fans, air or liquid cooling, three optical drives, four HDDs, and up to three SSDs. Build the PC you need today with the space to upgrade it tomorrow.

Easy UpkeepModular design creates great expandabliltyWe've included a number of ways to make building and maintaining your PC convenient. Two tool-less side panels make accessing your components a fast and trouble-free experience. A removable top, front, and bottom dust filter protect your system from dust intake and are easily cleaned. There's also a cut-out in the motherboard panel, giving you convenient access to your CPU cooler back plate.

The modern PC is potentially a mass of heat output and heat production hot spots. With CPUs rated at more than 100W of heat output, single graphics boards carrying similar ratings (and people want to run two!), multiple hard drives the norm, lots of memory and mainboards covered in heatpipes to combat toasty core logic and PWM circuits, a PC appreciably warming up a room when it’s working hard is no joke.

Watercooling for the PC has been around for years in some form or another, for at least as long as Scan have been in business, with basic physics defining why you want to use it. That means for air cooling, to cope with increasing temperature in the heatsink you need to move the air across it faster. That is why thermostatically controlled fans in your PC will turn faster the hotter something gets.